Parks v. Firgard

163 N.W.2d 385, 1968 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 990
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 10, 1968
DocketNo. 53074
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 163 N.W.2d 385 (Parks v. Firgard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parks v. Firgard, 163 N.W.2d 385, 1968 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 990 (iowa 1968).

Opinion

MASON, Justice.

Plaintiff Victor L. Parks appeals from judgment entered on a jury verdict returned in his action to recover for injuries sustained November 16, 1962, in a farm accident which occurred while he is alleged to have been employed by defendant Arthur Firgard. In response to the special interrogatory, “Do you find at time and place of plaintiff’s injury he was an employee of defendant?” the jury answered, “No.”

I. Plaintiff contends the trial court erred in refusing his requested instruction 4 and in failing to incorporate in instruction 8 as given the legal propositions raised in his requested instruction. This is the only attack directed to instructions or rulings on evidence.

Plaintiff alleged that on and before November 16, 1962, he was employed by defendant and during discharge of his duties [386]*386pursuant to this employment he was injured while driving a tractor pulling a load of corn from a field. He asserts his injuries were caused by defendant’s failure to provide him a safe place to work and in failing to provide a tractor with proper lights.

Defendant in answer to plaintiff’s petition denied plaintiff was employed by him on November 16 or that defendant was negligent; alleged plaintiff was guilty of negligence which was a proximate cause of his injuries and had assumed the risk; and asked that plaintiff’s petition be dismissed.

Plaintiff’s specifications of negligence were submitted to the jury.

The accident giving rise to this lawsuit occurred about 7 p.m. on the Cahill farm northeast of Mason City. Defendant had set up his drying equipment in the farmyard and was in the process of drying a batch. Plaintiff was returning from the field pulling a load of wet corn with Ca-hill’s tractor which had only one working headlight. As plaintiff attempted to maneuver the rig into position for the drier, the tractor hit a stump throwing him to the ground under the draw bar. The pin in the draw bar caught plaintiff’s clothing and was gouged into his lower back resulting in injuries for which he seeks recovery.

The issue in the trial court and here is whether at the time of the accident plaintiff was employed by defendant.

The appeal presents the question whether under the evidence plaintiff was entitled to have submitted to the jury his requested instruction on exchange of labor to the effect that if at the time of the accident he was helping defendant under a neighborly exchange of work he would then be defendant’s employee.

Plaintiff timely requested as instruction 4:

“There is evidence that, after the welding of the dryer on the morning of the accident, plaintiff continued to help the defendant in what defendant claimed was a neighborly exchange,' and that such neighborly exchange had taken place between the parties in previous years, and if you find at the time of the accident Victor Parks was assisting the defendant, Arthur Firgard, as a neighborly exchange of farm help, you may find that the relationship of employer-employee is present, whether there is any actual exchange of money as pay or compensation or not.
“You are further instructed that by the scope of employment, servant’s duties are to be defined by what he was employed to perform and by what, to the knowledge and approval of his master, he actually did perform, rather than by the mere verbal designation of services he was to render, and that the relationship and scope may be either express or implied from all the circumstances, and an employee does not cease to be in the course or scope of his employment merely because he is not actually engaged in doing some specifically prescribed task, if at the time he is doing some act which he deems necessary for the benefit or interest of his employer.”

II. Plaintiff and defendant, farmers living near each other in Cerro Gordo County, had been acquainted for 30 years and had exchanged farm labor frequently during the years. From 1959 through 1963 defendant owned a portable grain drier and allied equipment consisting of several wagons, a propane gas tank and a trailer house, doing custom corn drying.

Defendant describes custom corn drying as an operation where the farmer brings the corn from the field to the drier, it is then placed in the drier, tested for moisture and, when dry, taken from the drier and put back on the farmer’s wagon. We are told that when the corn drying operation is in progress it is the practice to continue through the night until the job is completed.

At least one year before the accident plaintiff had employed defendant to dry [387]*387his corn and had worked with defendant in the process. Defendant was again employed to dry plaintiff’s corn in 1962. When the drying process of plaintiff’s corn had been completed defendant asked plaintiff if he would help him with com drying jobs for a Mr. Gaffney and Mrs. Blau, told him if he would, defendant would pay him $5 a batch which is approximately 500 bushels, the amount of corn which could be dried at one time. At that time defendant did not have any other corn drying jobs lined up. Plaintiff testified he agreed and they started drying the Gaff-ney corn immediately.

The Gaffney corn was hauled to Oscar Firgard’s farm, where defendant’s equipment had been set up while drying plaintiff’s corn. Plaintiff’s brother, Orbra, hauled most of the corn with possibly some help from Mr. Gaffney. It was dried, reloaded and returned to the Gaffney farm. Defendant did not know who did the actual picking and shelling on the Gaffney place but plaintiff helped him on the drier at Oscar’s farm. When finished with the Gaff-ney corn they moved defendant’s equipment to the Blau farm, a distance of three miles. At the Blau farm defendant’s two brothers and Orbra were involved in the picker-sheller operation. Plaintiff again helped run the drier.

At the Blau operation the men hauling from the picker to the drier didn’t keep up with the drier and at times plaintiff and defendant would go to the field to meet them, exchange an empty wagon for a loaded one and return to the drier. The drying operation continued through the night and into the next day until completed. When the Blau job was finished plaintiff and defendant returned some of the equipment to defendant’s farm late in the afternoon of November 15.

Up to this point there is not much dispute in the facts.

III. The real dispute appears to be the relationship between plaintiff and defendant at the time of the accident.

Plaintiff admits defendant asked him to help dry the Gaffney and Blau corn at $5 a batch and although reluctant because he had other farm chores at his own farm, he agreed and did in fact work on both projects until completed. However, he contends there was no change in the arrangement of employment which existed on the days prior to his injury; that he had continued to work for defendant and his employment by defendant was uninterrupted until the time of the accident.

In support of this contention plaintiff emphasizes the fact that while the parties were drying the Blau corn, Joe Cahill contacted defendant November 15 about drying corn. Although he did not hear the conversation plaintiff asserts defendant told him afterwards of the new job and he agreed to help defendant on the drier at the Cahill farm. When plaintiff returned to defendant’s farm the morning of November 16 defendant was straightening, welding and preparing the equipment for the Cahill job.

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Bluebook (online)
163 N.W.2d 385, 1968 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 990, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parks-v-firgard-iowa-1968.